Helen
A. Gurfel, a widely renowned expert in real estate investment and
sustainability, has been named executive director of the Urban Land Institute (ULI) Greenprint Center for Building Performance, the
institute announced this week.
The ULI Greenprint Center is a unique industry-led initiative comprised
of real estate owners, investors, financial institutions and other
industry stakeholders who contribute information and measure individual
building and portfolio performance on the basis of energy consumption,
carbon emissions and several other environmental-related factors. The
center was created in January following the transfer of activities and
assets of the Greenprint Foundation to ULI. The center is assuming the
Greenprint Foundation’s mission, which is to lead the global real estate
community toward value-enhancing carbon reduction strategies.
Gurfel, who will join ULI’s staff on May 8, was most recently a
director of GE Capital Real Estate’s global sustainability group. As
the executive director of the ULI Greenprint Center, she will be
responsible for the overall management and executive leadership of the
center and the implementation of its work program. In addition, she
will direct the production of the center’s annual Greenprint Performance
Report as well as other associated research and work products.
During her time at GE Capital Real Estate, Gurfel spearheaded a number
of initiatives, including the development of sustainability programs
for GE’s portfolios in France, Canada, and the United Kingdom; leading a
rooftop solar program to deploy solar installations across properties
in North America and the United Kingdom; incorporating innovative
technologies into GE-owned properties; strengthening public-private
partnerships in order to promote sustainability; and most recently
developing a global strategy to measure energy consumption, cost, and
emissions across GE’s portfolio. During her time at GE, she was also a
member of the GE Capital Real Estate’s global valuation team and GE
Energy Financial Services’ portfolio management team. Prior to her work
at GE, she attended the Wharton School and the Lauder Institute at the
University of Pennsylvania. Prior to graduate school, she conducted
strategic consulting and system integration work for
PricewaterhouseCoopers. She also holds a B.S. in chemical engineering
from Columbia University.
The center’s worldwide alliance of members is steadily expanding, which
is making Greenprint’s collection of property data richer and more
extensive. The flagship product of the ULI Greenprint Center is its Greenprint
Performance Report, which includes the Greenprint Carbon Index (GCX), a
tool used by Greenprint members to gauge relative progress in reducing
greenhouse gas emissions over time. The first volume of the report,
issued in 2010, contained results obtained from performance during 2009
as a baseline measurement. The second volume, issued in 2011, had
results for 2010 that included 1,623 properties in the Americas, Europe
and Asia, and which covered a total of 31 million square meters of
commercial space. It showed a 0.6 percent reduction in greenhouse gas
emissions from the previous year on the like-for-like portfolio of
submitted properties.
The international scope and size of the report, including the GCX, make
it one of the real estate industry’s largest, most verifiable,
transparent and comprehensive energy benchmarking tools. It is unique in
that it provides an open standard for measuring, benchmarking and
tracking energy usage and resulting emissions on a building or portfolio
basis. The third volume is expected to be released in the summer of
2012.
The ULI Greenprint Center is part of ULI’s broader Climate, Land Use
and Energy (CLUE) initiative, which promotes industry best practices
regarding environmentally conscious design and development that
conserves energy, land and natural resources. Gurfel will head up the
center’s staff in its new headquarters, located at 270 Lafayette Street
in New York City alongside the offices of the ULI New York district
council.
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